The Guardian (USA)

Diplomatic mission to Niger fails to secure release of ousted president

- Peter Beaumont and Angelique Chrisafis in Paris

A west African diplomatic mission to Niger to seek the release and reinstatem­ent of the country’s president, Mohamed Bazoum, after a coup has failed, raising the risk of a military interventi­on.

The delegation, which had flown to the Nigerien capital, Niamey, left on Thursday, earlier than planned, without having met Bazoum or the coup leader, Gen Abdouraham­ane Tchiani.

The delegation, sent by the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), left without spending the night, even as Ecowas’s deadline to the junta for restoring Bazoum to power and the country’s constituti­on by Sunday drew closer.

The mission was being led by the former Nigerian head of state Gen Abdulsalam­i Abubakar. A second group, led by the Nigerian diplomat Babagana Kingibe, has gone to engage with the leaders of neighbouri­ng Libya and Algeria.

Regional military chiefs have been meeting in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja, to discuss the possibilit­y of a military interventi­on.

The rapidly escalating crisis has resulted in Niger recalling its ambassador­s to France, the US, Nigeria and Togo, amid unconfirme­d reports in Nigerian media that Niger was preparing to expel the ambassador­s of those countries.

With the Ecowas deadline for restoring Bazoum due to run out on Sunday, Niger’s coup leaders appear to have set themselves on a collision course with the country’s former western backers and Ecowas as they have stirred up anti-foreign sentiments to back their claim to power.

Late on Thursday the junta revoked five military cooperatio­n agreements with France, which has had 1,000 to 1,500 troops in Niger to help fight Islamist insurgent groups.

The decision about the revocation of the deals with France, dating between 1977 and 2020, was read out on national television late on Thursday by the junta representa­tive Col Amadou Abdramane. He said a diplomatic notice would be sent to France to that effect.

Niger also suspended broadcasts of French state-funded internatio­nal news outlets France 24 and RFI.

Responding to the announceme­nt France on Friday rejected the Niger junta’s move to scrap bilateral military pacts, saying the West African country’s “legitimate” leadership alone was entitled to do so.

“The legal framework of France’s defence agreement with Niger is based on accords that were signed with the legitimate Nigerien authoritie­s,” the foreign ministry said, after the junta in Niamey said it was scrapping military cooperatio­n agreements with Paris.

It did, however, “take note” of the junta’s statement on military cooperatio­n, it said.

The officers behind the coup said they would resist any foreign military interventi­on.

“Any aggression or attempted aggression against the state of Niger will see an immediate and unannounce­d response from the Niger defence and security forces on one of [the bloc’s] members,” one of the putschists said in a statement read on national television.

This came with “the exception of suspended friendly countries”, an allusion to Burkina Faso and Mali, neighbouri­ng countries that have also fallen to military coups in recent years. Those countries’ juntas have said any military interventi­on in Niger would be tanta

mount to a “declaratio­n of war”.

Bazoum, who has been held by the coup plotters with his family since being ousted, said on Thursday that if the putsch proved successful, “it will have devastatin­g consequenc­es for our country, our region and the entire world”.

In a column in the Washington Post – his first lengthy statement since his detention – Bazoum, 63, called on “the US government and the entire internatio­nal community to help us restore our constituti­onal order”.

Across Niger on Thursday, thousands of people rallied behind the coup leaders on the anniversar­y of the country’s independen­ce on 3 August 1960, some waving giant Russian flags and chanting anti-French slogans.

Anti-French sentiment in the region is on the rise, while Russian activity, often through the Wagner mercenary group, has grown.

Bazoum has said Niger’s neighbours have increasing­ly invited in “criminal Russian mercenarie­s such as the Wagner group at the expense of their people’s rights and dignity”.

“The entire Sahel region,” he said, “could fall to Russian influence via the Wagner group, whose brutal terrorism has been on full display in Ukraine.”

Niger has had a key role in western strategies to combat a jihadist insurgency that has plagued the Sahel since 2012, with France and the US stationing around 1,500 and 1,000 troops in the country respective­ly.

France has evacuated 1,079 people from Niger, more than half of them its nationals, since the coup. The US state department said it had chartered a plane to evacuate non-essential personnel and American citizens wishing to leave the country.

Bazoum was feted in 2021 after winning elections that ushered in Niger’s first-ever peaceful transition of power.

 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Men hold Nigerien and Russian flags as they rally in support of the putschist soldiers in the capital, Niamey.
Photograph: Reuters Men hold Nigerien and Russian flags as they rally in support of the putschist soldiers in the capital, Niamey.

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